Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 2 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 5 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 11 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 39 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
West, Richard E. | 2 |
Akbulut, Yavuz | 1 |
Bassili, John N. | 1 |
Boyle, Elizabeth A. | 1 |
Branch, Robert M. | 1 |
Capan, Lisa A. | 1 |
Chang, Hsin-Yi | 1 |
Chu, Samuel K. W. | 1 |
Chuang, Chien-Wen | 1 |
Chuang, Hsueh-Hua | 1 |
Coral, Mireille | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Reports - Evaluative | 40 |
Journal Articles | 39 |
Information Analyses | 1 |
Speeches/Meeting Papers | 1 |
Education Level
Higher Education | 12 |
Postsecondary Education | 10 |
Elementary Secondary Education | 8 |
Elementary Education | 3 |
Middle Schools | 3 |
Secondary Education | 3 |
Grade 5 | 2 |
Adult Education | 1 |
Grade 6 | 1 |
Grade 7 | 1 |
Grade 8 | 1 |
More ▼ |
Audience
Location
Australia | 1 |
China | 1 |
Fiji | 1 |
Malaysia | 1 |
South Africa | 1 |
South Korea | 1 |
Taiwan | 1 |
Turkey | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
Motivated Strategies for… | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Paul Atkinson; Tim Flanagan – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
The digital humanities have developed in concert with online systems that increase the accessibility and speed of learning. Whereas previously students were immersed in the fluidity of campus life, they have become suspended and drawn-into various streams and currents of digital pedagogy, which articulate new forms of epistemological movement,…
Descriptors: Humanities, Electronic Learning, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education
Darwazeh, Afnan N.; Branch, Robert M.; Karram, Omar I.; Hmoud, Mohammed R. – Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 2022
This article aims to propose a digital version of Darwazeh's learning taxonomy. The DLT consists of 10 cognitive processes sequenced hierarchical from simple to complex either vertically from one mental process to another, or horizontally in each mental process. These cognitive processes are facts' remembrance, generalities' remembrance,…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Taxonomy, Cognitive Processes, Recall (Psychology)
Gogus, Aytac – Online Learning, 2023
Offering online courses can be seen as a way of enhancing the three essential "presences" (teaching, cognitive, and social) of the Community of Inquiry (CoI) model. Creating and enhancing cognitive, teaching, and social presences require an innovation for teachers during planning, implementing, and evaluating their online courses. As…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Electronic Learning, Learning Experience, Cognitive Processes
Huang, Hsu-Wen; King, Jung-Tai; Lee, Chia-Lin – Educational Technology & Society, 2020
Integrating education practices and measurements of brain activity has the potential to make learning more engaging and productive. Direct recordings of electrical activity in the brain provide important information about the complex dynamics of the cognitive processes and mental states that occur during learning, which can ultimately empower…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Electronic Learning, Brain, Cognitive Processes
Joan S. York – Journal of Extension, 2024
This article explores the application of instructional design principles to enhance Extension e-learning programs. The growth of e-learning has led to its incorporation into many organizations, including extension programs, offering opportunities for expanded access to educational content. However, e-learning presents unique challenges, such as…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Instructional Design, Extension Education, Barriers
Terras, Melody M.; Boyle, Elizabeth A. – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2019
Although the Education sector has pioneered the use of technology, the pace of technological change has outstripped the slower processes of theoretical development and critical reflection, so the field is highly fragmented and lacks a comprehensive evidence base to support future development. In this paper, we consider how the insights offered by…
Descriptors: Games, Electronic Learning, Psychological Patterns, Learning Theories
Donham, Cristine; Pohan, Cathy; Menke, Erik; Kranzfelder, Petra – Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, 2022
While many STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) instructors returned to in-person instruction in fall 2021, others found themselves continuing to teach via online, hybrid, or hybrid flexible (i.e., hyflex) formats. Regardless of one's instructional modality, the findings from our own and other studies provided insight into…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, COVID-19, Pandemics, STEM Education
Shafriri, Yuval; Levy, Dalit – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2018
This paper presents five emergent categories of learning with mobile applications (apps) and suggests an overarching profile to characterize such apps. The categories are organized into three levels. The micro level focuses on interactions and includes (i) interaction with the device and (ii) interaction with the environment. The intermediate…
Descriptors: Computer Oriented Programs, Handheld Devices, Electronic Learning, Affordances
Mathew, David – E-Learning and Digital Media, 2014
This article views the temporal dimensions of e-learning through a psychoanalytic lens, and asks the reader to consider links between online learning and psychoanalysis. It argues that time and its associated philosophical puzzles impinge on both psychoanalytic theory and on e-learning at two specific points. The first is in the distinction…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Time, Psychiatry, Cognitive Processes
Schwonke, Rolf – Educational Technology & Society, 2015
Instructional design theories such as the "cognitive load theory" (CLT) or the "cognitive theory of multimedia learning" (CTML) explain learning difficulties in (computer-based) learning usually as a result of design deficiencies that hinder effective schema construction. However, learners often struggle even in well-designed…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Metacognition, Self Control
Lewin, David – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2016
Is physical presence an essential aspect of a rich educational experience? Can forms of virtual encounter achieve engaged and sustained education? Technophiles and technophobes might agree that authentic personal engagement is educationally normative. They are more likely to disagree on how authentic engagement is best achieved. This article…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Attention, Educational Theories, Role of Education
Johnson, Genevieve Marie – Interactive Learning Environments, 2014
In educational discourse on human learning (i.e. the result of experience) and development (i.e. the result of maturation), there are three fundamental theoretical frameworks, -- behaviourism, cognitivism and constructivism, each of which have been applied, with varying degrees of success, in online environments. An ecological framework of human…
Descriptors: Interaction, Learning Theories, Electronic Learning, Ecology
Stewart, Cherry; Wolodko, Brenda – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2016
This article explores Robert Kegan's adult constructive-developmental (ACD) theory. We compare these ideas to the way educators at each of Kegan's meaning-making levels might plan, implement, and assess digitally enhanced teaching activities. Using Drago-Severson's interpretation of Kegan's concepts, the authors propose that behaviors of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Adult Development, Theories, Comparative Analysis
Noonan, Jeff; Coral, Mireille – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2013
A crucial role of the educator, we contend, is to motivate students to want to feel the pain that all cognitive growth requires. This challenge, we will suggest, makes a certain form of conflict essential to the pedagogical relationship, a conflict which requires copresence in shared physical space. If we are correct, then on-line contexts are not…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Role of Education, Cognitive Processes, Electronic Learning
Greer, Diana L.; Crutchfield, Stephen A.; Woods, Kari L. – Journal of Education, 2013
Struggling learners and students with Learning Disabilities often exhibit unique cognitive processing and working memory characteristics that may not align with instructional design principles developed with typically developing learners. This paper explains the Cognitive Theory of Multimedia Learning and underlying Cognitive Load Theory, and…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Cognitive Processes, Short Term Memory, Instructional Design